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Why I Blog: A Short Synopsis

I love all of the wonderful D-related tips shared by members of the DOC (including me!). ﻿

The interactions I have had these last few weeks in relation to the blog have reminded me why I started blogging in the first place, and why it's so important to continue. I'll admit I'm not exactly the most punctual blogger, and lord knows my pictures look like a three year old took them. But the real purpose of Nerdy April's Space Adventures is not to update you about the latest Diabetes-related care (there are plenty of amazing blogs out there for that), or to fill up the interwebs with beautifully composed photographs (again, lots of great places to find those). This blog is an avenue to push the boundaries Diabetes creates, to share stories of perseverance (read: the FAA), and to network with those who may be afraid to question the rules and regulations. Sure, I talk about personal struggles and successes, and meaningless nibbles of information, but that only helps to illustrate that I am just like you.

I don't always think about Diabetes, and it isn't always the main event in my life.

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Someday I want to open a box. The box will be neatly wrapped up with an excessive amount of packaging. Its contents will have been years in the making, and even though it won't weigh much, this small box will represent a huge step forward.

As most flight hardware begins, the space-rated closed-loop insulin delivery and monitoring device inside the box will be sterile and stark. But as the batteries whir to life and insulin is placed within, it will become an extra appendage, an external pancreas, for this Type 1 astro-hopeful. Bluetooth connections will be made and doctors, hungry for telemetry from my bionic body, will be at the ready. We will rely on each other - he on I for his very existence, and I on him for my continued existence. Together we will make up one whole, completely functioning, Type 1 Diabetic astronaut.

Admittedly, this dream feels further and further from reality. I have lived with this disease just under 20 years now, and the cure has always been "just 5 …

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Disclaimer

I'm a rocket scientist...I diagnose and treat rocket problems, not medical ones!!! Sometimes I blog about my personal experiences as a person living with Type 1 Diabetes, however, this is not to be taken as medical advice.